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► ' .. / ' '• l- . r ml y l buildings In earthquake dangers the Los-Angeles board of education decided to abandon brick school favor of tents or bungalows, preferably the former. Tbb photograph shows some of the tents now used by the pupils of one school there that was damaged by a recent earthquake. / Slum in Cleveland to Be Eliminated 7 Original L|w oi Nature By ED HOWE '“pHOSE emotionalists who contend a that only they sufficiently recognise the fine things of life, and that fol lowers of the religion of simple be haviorism lick these appreciations and helps, aro mistaken. The advocates of good conduct for Its own sake, and sufficient rellglpn, enjoy sll real ten* derness and beauty; believe in every good thing, j myself have been known to appreciate a rose, a symphony, s picture, the gentleness of women, the beauty of children. The Idealists claim too mutti for their virtue; sometimes otter /falsehoods. Such conduct Is a violation of the doctrine of behavior ism; which teaches good and correct conduct In all things. * / You may claim such:’ unselfishness and Idealism as you please. In expla nation of yonr good behavior, and I shall give yon credit. 1 believe many claim/ too much nobleness for their good citizenship,..but 1 can easily for give such exaggeration in cases where the good gltisenshlp la actually prac ticed with reasonable modesty. The Idealists say simple behaviorism for Its own sake, and' for .profit, is not enough; that good men should become •missionaries, and offer more hope and help to the benighted. The teachers of behaviorism reply that their doc trine has long been taught In every community on the face of the earth by policemen, sheriffs. Judges, parents, neighbors; that one may travel every where, and never be out of tight of teachers of behaviorism, or of material triumphs for those who practice the flowing.' to preff TfiftThs of simple behaviorism has succeeded. Its advocates point oat that tvery ad vance In civilization has'been accom plished by Its followers; every good man and f woman a triumph for It", that" Its doctrines have never been success fully denied, as have the doctrines of the Idealists. The Idealists have fought great wars In their crusades, whlle the simple behavlbrlsts have steadily ad vocated peace. In the long march of practical men they have not neglected education, moral teaching, the arts, ■of most - Westerners Not Wanted in Land of NepaL # After ten years’ wandering in un traveled regions of the Orient, I came at last to Nepal, that country of which Terceval Landon wrote; “Of all the Closed lands of this world —closed by the deliberate will and policy of those who live In them; closed whether from piety, super stition, Jealousy, or perhaps above all froir mistrust of the European— Nepal Is thp only survivor.’ Only 100 or so Englishmen and perhaps ten oilier Europeans have known the secret valley of Katman du and Nepal’s capital, “the sacred city of Katmandu.” Nepal’s Inac- cessibility ts proverbial. Rarely has an exception been .made to the rule against the admission of foreigners The self-importance and self-'”ffl- ciency of Katmandu have not been altered by time or the proximity of conquering Europeans. The Nepa lese, far from feeling Inferior to Eu ropenns, rather look down on them, as I had occasion to learn, fonstanee Handley writes, In Asia Magazine. One morning when we wfte riding In Katmandn we were literally swept Into the gutter to permit a Nepalese aristocrat to pass. He was escorted by one of the most fantastic entour ages I hove aver seen.. First came a man galloping on a small nn- groomed, wild-maned pony and blowing with might and main upon a conch. He waa followed by a cav alcade, In the center of which was a closed Rolls Royce, surrounded by a dozen or more huge men well over six feet. In quaint uniforms, on tjny Hungarian* Noted for Skill in Horsemanship Hungarians are called, on account of traditions of a thousand years; a nation of horsemen. The Hungarians of oW were vastly superior In horse manship to the peoples of central Europe, says the Washington Post, and this made It easy for them to sweep away obstacles and achieve military purposes. Hungarians of s thousand years ago who settled down In the Danube valley were one with their horse. They hunted, shot the arrow, threw the javelin^ from horseback, and excelled In trick rid ing, their favorite amusement, as well as flat and obstacle races, so old manuscripts tell us. Sports centered round the horsA Arpad, the prince under whom Hun garians settled down in that part of the world, founded a stud on an is land.in the Danube And entrusted It to the care of one of his men of tho name of Caepel. Even today the big island -Immediately below' TTHflapest and the factory town In Its northern district sre called Csepel. , hill ■ponies. ” They looked ridiculous with their feet brushing the ground. Only the urgently whispered In junctions of my companion kept me from laughing as they swept by. I was parried of TTl? possible" dfre resuTts of a misplaced smile In a country that has always abhorred even the sight of a white face. Too Much “Party" Last Night Too Much Food/ Loto Hours, Smoky Atmosphoro j; YKT-Tkit Morning No "Add Hoadacht’—No Upset Stomach ~S3ehlists say this is the QUICK- LEST way EST, SUREST and EASIEST way to combat FEELING THE EFFECTS of over-indt — . . . _ most powerful acid neuti Certainly western wmnen seem an t6 Juti do this: Though the use of federal money for slum clearance projects has been abandoned as a major part of the national recovery program, three such projects have been approved and will be carried out. One of them Is for the elimination of a slum area in Cleveland. Ohio; a section of which is shown above. It will be cleared and modern apartment houses will he erected. • 1 Rain Goggles for the Motorist F. D BIRTHDAY CAKE This is L. A. V. Davoren ut England wearingj£ pair of the “rain goggles’ -that he has Invented?-They are fitted with windscreen wipers which-are driven by an exterior air fan that comes Into operation when the motorist is trav eling at a speed* of fifteen miles an > hour pr upwards. Scottish • ; ' : (hip Founders v. mm ,V W,, mmj II iil iXAc, ‘ •• f. •* ie*T.Uc wiiitor storm on tlie coasts of Great Britain the lightship D.uk broke from her jnoorings off Gravellnea with a crew of seven and foun dered on the rocks of Dunkirk. Only three of the sailors were rescued Here Is probably the biggest birth day cake ever baked. It waa made at Coral Gables, Fla„ and sent to the patients at Warm Springs. Ga.. to be eaten on President Roosevelt’s birth day, January 30. Reside It stands CoL Henry L. Dougherty.: general chair man of the national committee that arranged for Roosevelt- birthday par- ties in hundreds of cities- and towns to raise money for the Warm Springs Foundation. - STEEL TRUST-HEAP - v . This is a new picture of William Irvin, president of the United States Steel corporation, made Tn Washington » whan be appeared before the national I labor board. education have approved the doctrines of the behaviorists; the men of science (which Is honest education checked to date) have accepted behaviorism as their own doctrine and practljpe, .and decided against those overwrought Idealists who claim simple good eon duct for Its own sake is not enough. I have known a good many men to apparently ■ attain respectability and success in life, and then jump out of a tenth-story window because of some thing they couldn’t satisfactorily ex plain. _ I have been thinking them over, and cannot recall one who. during his ap parent days of responsibility, did not exhibit. - a - streak- of yellow, or occa sionally wave the black (lag of piracy a little; display some dangerous belief or habit , All men have bad tmbits. Inherited from the monkey, old Adam, or God knows where, hut good steady men hide these weaknesses with consider able success, and have the decency to be ashamed of them. When a good steady man gets In a Jam—as all men do—his disposition la to work out of It with as little disaster aa possible. If he la running around too much at night getting loo much In debt neg tecting his work, you are usually able to note his attempting to let up a lit tle ; he doesn't take the bit In his teeth and run away until the only remedy (a poison, a bullet, or a jump from the roof, • • * In spite of the depression 1 have a steady job. So far as I am able to estimate. It pays me around fifteen dol lars a week. I hear O. O. McIntyre la able to earn a hundred times more. This Is regrettable, from my stand point, but am I warranted In accept ing th£ American philosophy that Mr. McIntyre be compelled at pistol point to divide with me, afnee I have had every opportunity, he has had? In the first place, he won’t do it. and there j *ts no power on earth to compel him to; the better and more efficient workera have always been able to get most pay. Captain Kidd did It working with as ^capable a gang of radicals aa the world nas cvCi Known • 1% *■ Ayapvani tv tea a treasure cheat we look for, not the treasure cheats of hla fifteen dollars a week* followers. The sea la free to ev erybody for fishing, piracy, commerce. The mere efficient win most: no law weak men can make will ever supplant this original law of nature. / • 9 • X When a man sits down to write, be usuaHj concerns himself not with plainly recording hla opinions, hut with displaying hM talent as a writer, and deciding iyhat line of piffle will beat suit bi^n of hooki and manu scripts. No other man In America can make ai good a “cab•9r1t ,, vetch aa I am to make. . . (Note: “<*b wit" a free translation from the French, and refers to a man who. returning home In a cab from a dub meeting where he made a rotten speech. Is thinking of the brilliant thing* he might have said.) ^ 9 9 9 There are so many colonels, majors, captains, first and second lieutenants, sergeants and common soldiers that I confess I prick up my ears on hearing- tf an occasional general. u, m«. a«u Syadl—WMP tsrvtas - Intrusion Ip this valley of lovely women. The women of Nepal are pale alabaster In color, with chis eled ffahwea and perfectly shaped umuMis, smalt teeth llke'pearls, large brown eves and lashes that Would —moke-ou hcigliteet fl|m atari en TAKE—2 tablespoonfuls of Phtt» ps’ Milk of Ms 4 * • water BEFORE] lips' Milk of Magnesia in a glass of RE bed. In the monrinff vlous. Their costume consists of ,a bodice and full, swinging skirts oir trousers*/ Handsome carved anklets and rings adorn their lltHg feet. Froth their waving hair hang long, bright veils, fastened with orna; meats. -About Ourselves Society is like a large piece of frozen water; and skating welt is the great art of social life.—Landon. X- take 2 more tablespoonfols with thd juice era WHOLE ORANGE. That's all! Tomorrow you'll feel great! p^^Tir^g^Sf- Each tablet is equal to a teaspoonful of the liquid. Get genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia inf tbs familiar liquid form, or the new, marvelously convenient tablets. Be it’s PHILLIPS’... kind doctors endorse. IH TAHiT UID fOKM MEMBER N.R. A. Quick as You Caught It tf If thrwt is sots, enuh an* dteotv* 3 Bayw Aspirin ta * Tablets in a half ghns «f water and gargt* accord* inf to dkactiqiM in bob Almost Instant Relief in This Way * *v^ ured above the rj ized a* the QUICK EST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will check an ordi- Ask your doctor about^ this. And when you buy, see that you get Poao Hot Hum the Haurf the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets. They dissolve almost instantly. And tbua work almost inaUntly when you take them. And for a gargle. Genuine BAYER Aspirin Tablets ' dissolve so completely,' th$y leave no Irritating par ticles. Get a box of 19 tablets or bottle of 34 or 100 at any .drugstore. ■■OUR BIG Department Store V Dot ■tens of our town, as wholo, mm but t^to big doportmont storo of ditan oontar. Collootiwoly thojr oSmr * . odvantago onjoyod by tho pooplo of tbs largo citisa. Tho only difSaronco ia that all dopart- saanta ara not undor ono roof nor ono ownership. Tho warioty la hare, tho oonvonionce Is hari, tho roliabllity la hara and you can haws plenty oi time to Inwoatiffata your Tabs Adwmtago mf tho lonrito off Our Laoal Marchauii